Updated: 9/11/06; 7:42:06 AM.
Sustainability
        

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Speaking of eWaste and the ecological challenges facing the computer industry, I've just posted a new 'New Bottom Line' column to the Natural Logic web site.

It Began With a Dot: Product Regulation and Future Markets looks at:
  • how the European electronic product take back and content directives are rippling through the industry's supply chain;
  • why so many companies have been surprised, scrambling and resistent;
  • how they could have seen it coming -- and can see what might be coming next -- by looking through; and
  • what they can do about it -- profitably.
An excerpt:

Some companies have embraced the inevitable, and are diligently investing time and money in reaching goalposts that the EU is still moving. Hewlett Packard, for example, has made "design for environment" a key part of product design strategy, and has created a joint venture with mining giant Noranda to field an efficient take-back system -- mining the exceptionally rich ores of modern society's high tech detritus.

Others have taken a "do as little as possible, as late as possible" strategy -- a strategy based on a pervasive and deeply wrong-headed assumption: that designing and delivering better, more efficient, less toxic, more recyclable products would necessarily cost more money and yield less profit. The bottom line impact of losing access to the European market aside, the assumption is patently -- and demonstrably -- false....

What can be done about it? Here are four steps to consider:

  1. Understand the drivers.
  2. Drop the assumptions. Face the facts.
  3. Design what works - before it's demanded.
  4. Steer by the logic, not the thresholds

11:12:42 PM    comment []  trackback []

Apple's done it again with the iPod Shuffle, continuing the ephemeralization of technolust.

Very, very cool.

But not totally cool, as Ted Smith of Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition reminds us:

Tell Steve Jobs to recycle his iWaste: Steve Jobs should do more than celebrate his profits. He should live up to his good reputation and take responsibility for Apple's iWaste. He should harness the company's resources to produce toxic-free iPods and to recycle the millions of obsolete Apple computers that can poison our communities with over 36 million pounds of lead. Up to now, Jobs has chosen another course. His company has no effective program to recycle discarded computers or iPods nor has it eliminated many toxins in its products. It opposes legislation to recycle electronic waste and produce cleaner machines. Batteries for iPods that fizzle out after a year or two and which are difficult and expensive to replace are Apple's most recent addition to the growing toxic iWaste mass. It's time for Jobs to take another approach.

11:02:29 PM    comment []  trackback []

© Copyright 2006 Gil Friend.
 

BlogRoll Me! | Skype me!

My work:
Natural Logic My speaking gigs


Read this blog in:

Deutsch / Español / Français / Italiano / Portuguese


January 2005
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31          
Dec   Feb


So... where you from, Chum?
Locations of visitors to this page


How this works


Recent Posts


Blogs I slog through:


Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website.

Subscribe to "Sustainability" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.


Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.